State Ex Rel. Banker v. Yelle

48 P.2d 573, 183 Wash. 380, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 726
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1935
DocketNo. 25801. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 P.2d 573 (State Ex Rel. Banker v. Yelle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Banker v. Yelle, 48 P.2d 573, 183 Wash. 380, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 726 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

This is an original application on notice for a peremptory mandate directing the state auditor to allow an expense voucher duly authenticated by the director of conservation and development and to issue a warrant for the amount of such voucher.

The question to be decided is whether or not relator, as such director, has authority under chapter 7, Laws of 1935, p. 17 (Rem. 1935 Sup., § 3008), to issue collateral trust bonds in the form and under the provisions of a trust indenture designated as an exhibit and made a part of the affidavit of relator.

In 1919, the state legislature passed the “state reclamation act,” the object of which was the reclamation and development of the arid, swamp, overflow and logged-off lands in the state economically avail *382 able for reclamation and development as agricultural lands. To carry out the purposes of the act, a state reclamation revolving fund was created in the state treasury to consist of all sums that might from time to time be appropriated thereto by the legislature from other funds in the state treasury; of gifts, donations, bequests and devises made to the state therefor, and the proceeds of the sale thereof; the proceeds of the sale or redemption of, and the interest earned by, securities purchased or acquired with the moneys thereof; all reimbursements or moneys advanced for the payment of assessments upon state, school, granted and other public lands for the improvement thereof; and all taxes received under levies authorized by the legislature therefor. A state reclamation board was set up to administer the act, but in 1923 the duties of that board were transferred to the director of conservation and development.

Although reclamation districts are not clearly defined in the act, they were undoubtedly intended to include, and have been construed by the director to include, diking-, drainage and irrigation districts under chapter 158, Laws of 1919, §§ 4 and 7, pp. 444, 447, Rem. Rev. Stat., §§ 3007 and 3010 [P. C. §§ 98-22, 98-25]; and chapter 132, Laws of 1923, § 2, p. 363 (Rem. Rev. Stat., §3010 [P. C. §98-25]).

. Since the creation of the fund, tax moneys have been paid into the fund annually up to 1931, and an appropriation from the general fund into the revolving- fund has been made. Prom the moneys available in the revolving fund, the- director, carrying out the designated purposes of the act, has purchased in connection with refinancing proceedings the bonds of a number of municipal reclamation districts of the state. According to his seventh biennial report, there has *383 been spent for that purpose approximately three million dollars.

Of recent years, the financial condition of many of the various reclamation districts has been deplorable, and the demands upon the director for refinancing the bonded indebtedness of these districts has been urgent. The director has been badly handicapped in doing this work by lack of money, according to his report.

Because of the lack of funds in the various reclamation districts, which were so greatly in need of refinancing, in 1933 the legislature passed a special act, chapter 13, Laws Ex. Ses. 1933, p. 37 (Rem. 1934 Sup., § 3008), specifically authorizing him to borrow money upon the security of any bonds of any reclamation district in the state revolving fund. This act was further amended by chapter 7, Laws of 1935, p. 17 (Rem. 1935 Sup., §3008), and the particular provision permitting the borrowing of money upon the security of the bonds was not changed. Meanwhile, the director has attempted to borrow money as authorized by the 1933 and now by the 1935 act, according to his seventh biennial report. This could not be done without the issuance of definitive bonds under some valid instrument adequately pledging the security.

The appropriation made by the legislature in 1935 of $1,250,000 from the revolving fund expressly limits expenditures for financing and refinancing purposes to cash on hand and available for expenditure. Chapter 183, Laws of 1935, p. 865. Relator’s affidavit alleges that there is urgent need for cash with which to proceed with refinancing operations. It is in an effort to obtain this cash, so that the amount appropriated, or such part thereof as shall be necessary, may be expended, that the director proposes to issue collateral trust bonds pursuant to the terms of the form of that indenture.

*384 The only resistance made by respondent, through the Attorney General, is by way of demurrer upon the grounds that the affidavit and petition do not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, particularly in that the bond proposed to be executed would bind the department of conservation and development, and thereby the state, for the payment of the money represented by such bond; and that the bond, when executed in such form, will purport to be, and will be, an obligation of the department of conservation and development of the state in an amount exceeding its constitutional power to become obligated; and that the act, purporting to authorize the pledging of the bonds in the hands of the director, does not authorize the director to execute a bond or indenture of the form and character shown in the exhibit to relator’s petition.

Chapter 7, Laws of 1935, § 5, p. 17 (Eem. 1935 Sup., § 3008), so far as pertinent, authorizes the director

“To sell and dispose of any reclamation district bonds acquired by the director, at public or private sale, and to pay the proceeds of such sale into the reclamation fund: . . .
“To borrow money upon the security of any bonds, including refunding bonds, of any reclamation district, acquired by the director, on such terms and rate of interest and over such period of time as the director may see fit, and to hypothecate and pledge reclamation district bonds or refunding bonds acquired by the director as security for such loan. Such loans shall have, as their sole security, the bonds so pledged and the revenues therefrom, and the director shall not have authority to pledge the general credit of the state of Washington: . . . ”

The above quoted provisions of the statute empower the director to sell and dispose of reclamation district bonds and to borrow money upon the security of the bonds. They are silent as to the issuance of bonds *385 by tbe director for the purpose of evidencing the pledge and borrowing the money.

The primary question immediately presents itself as to whether the power to issue bonds is necessarily implied in the power to borrow money and to pledge the reclamation district bonds as security for that purpose, particularly when coupled with the even broader power to sell and dispose of such reclamation district bonds.

It would seem only logical that the power to borrow money upon the security of any bonds, including refunding bonds of any reclamation district acquired by the director and the pledge of such bonds as security for that purpose, must necessarily imply the power to execute such formal instrument as is necessary, and does not pledge the general credit of the state to secure such reclamation bonds.

“A

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 573, 183 Wash. 380, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-banker-v-yelle-wash-1935.